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Re: FitTavern
I never noticed this thread before. To me, the biggest tip I can give you guys is to slow down the eating. I know some people may disagree or downplay it, but calorie count is everything... seriously. It doesn't matter what you eat, it just matters what it adds up to in calories at the end of the day.
Now, what you eat is going to affect how you feel a lot more, and how healthy you are... but honestly as far as raw weight gain/loss its the biggest thing. Now if you want to lose weight and find a decently toned body under the fat, then yes working out helps too. Or if you can't just help but eat way too much, then you'll have to account for it with burning way too man calories working out. I used to be an athlete, now I'm in a desk job where I sit on my ass 8 hours a day.. And I started off eating the same as if I was still running laps every day. I had put on quite a few pounds after about 6 months of being here, but then turned around and lost it all and more. I ended up putting on 25 pounds, and dropped 30. Though to be honest I gained back close to 10 now lol. When I started back running it didn't make a difference cause I was eating too much still. I went on a very basic diet (Stu could probably use this since we're the same height and I have a large frame too) Day to day I ate 2,200-2,400 calories. Completly took fast food out of my diet, took out sugar/sweets/pastries, and took out any liquid calories like Gatorade, soda, and juice. I didn't eat many veggies, cause I live alone and don't know how to cook any good :P Though I did get a decent amount of protien, and took my vitamans every day. I spread what I ate out to 4 meals. In losing weight, my workout actually went down from going to the gym and lifting weights every day and jogging on the tred mill, to just spending 30 minutes a day at home on my bike. Pounds fell off way faster when I wasn't working as hard and wasn't eating as much. |
Re: FitTavern
I barely had any motivation left after I 'failed' last time. But this morning (half a day late) I did the program anyway. I stuck with what I should have done last time. I managed alright. :) So I did an extra level.
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Re: FitTavern
Updates anyone? I just decided to give this a try, and I wonder how you guys did in the final weeks.
Initial Test: 21 Week 1, Day 1: Finished with 12 Week 1, Day 2: (today) I also started some of the interval training that someone mentioned here. I'm starting off slow, with only about 30 seconds of as-fast-as-I-can running, and then 60 seconds of jogging or walking about four or five times in a row. I've done two days of that, and my body wanted to kill me. But the first few days of getting into a workout are always the hardest, so I'll keep it going, and hopefully be able to switch to 60 seconds hard running, 30 seconds jogging. P.S. Xantar is fucking insane! Is that legit? He'd be a killer rock climber. |
Re: FitTavern
That's not really Xantar, you silly. :D Although he apparently is very strong and muscled. Oh and I bet that movie is real... but: you never see more than 5 or so chin-ups. Maybe the guy does 5 of those, rests for 2 days, does a few more, etc. And he just made it look like it's all in one training.
Edit: Xantar zegt: manasecret believed that I would post a video of myself? Xantar zegt: and actually, rock climbers mostly have strong forearms, not pull up muscles. Last week saw myself in the mirror and suddenly thought: "I don't want to get any beefier." I like the way I look now. Well, the arms and chest. I plan to work on the abs and maybe back. So..... I quit the training. :) I'll still do the exercises once in a while, to stay in shape, but I don't have to be stronger. |
Re: FitTavern
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As for rock climbers, yeah strong forearms are key, but pull up muscles are essential as well, plus the thousand or so other muscles that non-Xantar guy uses in that video are very very helpful. The holding the legs in the L form, pulling up, and holding in that position is just one good rock climbing exercise. Climbing uses tons of muscles due to all the contortions of your body that you have to do. It's a great full body exercise. Fun, too. |
Re: FitTavern
I finally failed week 6. It seemed like week 6 all of a sudden got a lot harder. Im going to take a week off, maybe do some lighter stuff on my total gym, then give week 6 a try again next week.
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Re: FitTavern
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Re: FitTavern
Bah, I used to run the 200 in like 28 seconds in 8th grade...
er, I think it was 28 seconds... |
Re: FitTavern
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Re: FitTavern
Running is one thing "Sprinting" is another.
"I'm starting off slow, with only about 30 seconds of as-fast-as-I-can running" I got the same impression stu got. Speeding up and slowing down the pace is good, but you should probably be at the faster speed 1/3 or 1/4 of the workout. And it shouldn't be a hard sprint, just running at a bit faster pace. |
Re: FitTavern
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And to Jason: First and foremost, 28 seconds I would imagine is a very impressive 200m time for an 8th grader. Secondly...265 pounds. Find another regular guy like me who looks like me and I'll be glad to take him on in a sprint. Finally, it was an estimate. I wasn't timing myself. It could have been less, could have been more. |
Re: FitTavern
I think I'm a born sprinter. I always one of the (2, maybe 3) fastest kids at school.
It's just a shame that I never sprint anymore. I don't even run (I think I might have weak knees or something). |
Re: FitTavern
Guess I misunderstood the interval training :)
100 hundreds pushups update: Initial Test: 21 Week 1: 3rd column Week 1, Day 1: Finished with 12 Week 1, Day 2: Finished (just barely) with 10 |
Re: FitTavern
Damn, I haven't worked out for a week and a half now. :( I was going to start this week and I got sick.
As for the hundred pushups, yeah, in week 6 it becomes a clusterfuck of pushups. I'm going to redo week 5 with excellent form to ready myself. |
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